Unearthed ice may be the Arctic’s oldest buried glacier remnant

On a remote island in the Canadian Arctic, researchers have discovered the remains of an ancient glacier that could be over a million years old. The discovery represents what may be the oldest glacier ice ever found buried in permafrost — ground that has been frozen for at least 2 years straight — in the Arctic, researchers report in the January 1 Geology. For researchers keen on studying the glacier, the clock is ticking, as human-caused climate change has exposed the long-preserved ice to melting.

Like notes in the pages of a logbook, the gas bubbles, compounds and particulates trapped in a glacier’s icy layers can yield information about

→ Continue reading at Science News

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

Trump’s Day One Executive Orders Will Worsen Climate Crisis

On his first day in office, President Trump has signed a slew of executive orders that will set the United States on a radically...

How Invasive Plants Are Fueling California’s Wildfire Crisis

Fire has always shaped the landscape in California. But today it burns hotter, more frequently, and spreads further than ever before—a shift driven by...

How Trump’s immigration plans could affect care for your elderly parents | CNN Business

CNN  —  Terry Hodge would have a tough time caring for the 150 or so elderly women at...